Integrated pest management (IPM), also known as integrated pest control of(IPC) is a broad-based approach that integrates practices for economic control of pests. IPM aims to suppress pest populations below the economic injury level (EIL). The UN's Food and Agriculture Organization
defines IPM as "the careful consideration of all available pest control
techniques and subsequent integration of appropriate measures that
discourage the development of pest populations and keep pesticides and
other interventions to levels that are economically justified and reduce
or minimize risks to human health and the environment. IPM emphasizes
the growth of a healthy crop with the least possible disruption to
agro-ecosystems and encourages natural pest control mechanisms." Entomologists and ecologists have urged the adoption of IPM pest control since the 1970s. IPM allows for safer pest control.
The introduction and spread of invasive species can also be managed with IPM by reducing risks while maximizing benefits and reducing costs.
History
Shortly after World War II, when synthetic insecticides became widely available, entomologists in California developed the concept of "supervised insect control". Around the same time, entomologists in the US Cotton Belt
were advocating a similar approach. Under this scheme, insect control
was "supervised" by qualified entomologists and insecticide applications
were based on conclusions reached from periodic monitoring of pest
and natural-enemy populations. This was viewed as an alternative to
calendar-based programs. Supervised control was based on knowledge of
the ecology and analysis of projected trends in pest and natural-enemy
populations.
Supervised control formed much of the conceptual basis for the
"integrated control" that University of California entomologists
articulated in the 1950s. Integrated control sought to identify the best
mix of chemical and biological controls for a given insect pest.
Chemical insecticides were to be used in the manner least disruptive to
biological control. The term "integrated" was thus synonymous with
"compatible." Chemical controls were to be applied only after regular
monitoring indicated that a pest population had reached a level (the
economic threshold) that required treatment to prevent the population
from reaching a level (the economic injury level) at which economic
losses would exceed the cost of the control measures.
IPM extended the concept of integrated control to all classes of
pests and was expanded to include all tactics. Controls such as
pesticides were to be applied as in integrated control, but these now
had to be compatible with tactics for all classes of pests. Other
tactics, such as host-plant resistance and cultural manipulations,
became part of the IPM framework. IPM combined entomologists, plant pathologists, nematologists and weed scientists.
In the United States, IPM was formulated into national policy in February 1972 when President Richard Nixon directed federal agencies to take steps to advance the application of IPM in all relevant sectors. In 1979, President Jimmy Carter established an interagency IPM Coordinating Committee to ensure development and implementation of IPM practices.
Applications
IPM is used in agriculture, horticulture, forestry, human habitations, preventive conservation and general pest control, including structural pest management, turf pest management and ornamental pest management.
Principles
An American IPM system is designed around six basic components:
- Acceptable pest levels—The emphasis is on control, not eradication. IPM holds that wiping out an entire pest population is often impossible, and the attempt can be expensive and unsafe. IPM programmes first work to establish acceptable pest levels, called action thresholds, and apply controls if those thresholds are crossed. These thresholds are pest and site specific, meaning that it may be acceptable at one site to have a weed such as white clover, but not at another site. Allowing a pest population to survive at a reasonable threshold reduces selection pressure. This lowers the rate at which a pest develops resistance to a control, because if almost all pests are killed then those that have resistance will provide the genetic basis of the future population. Retaining a significant number of unresistant specimens dilutes the prevalence of any resistant genes that appear. Similarly, the repeated use of a single class of controls will create pest populations that are more resistant to that class, whereas alternating among classes helps prevent this.
- Preventive cultural practices—Selecting varieties best for local growing conditions and maintaining healthy crops is the first line of defense. Plant quarantine and 'cultural techniques' such as crop sanitation are next, e.g., removal of diseased plants, and cleaning pruning shears to prevent spread of infections. Beneficial fungi and bacteria are added to the potting media of horticultural crops vulnerable to root diseases, greatly reducing the need for fungicides.
- Monitoring—Regular observation is critically important. Observation is broken into inspection and identification. Visual inspection, insect and spore traps, and other methods are used to monitor pest levels. Record-keeping is essential, as is a thorough knowledge of target pest behavior and reproductive cycles. Since insects are cold-blooded, their physical development is dependent on area temperatures. Many insects have had their development cycles modeled in terms of degree-days. The degree days of an environment determines the optimal time for a specific insect outbreak. Plant pathogens follow similar patterns of response to weather and season.
- Mechanical controls—Should a pest reach an unacceptable level, mechanical methods are the first options. They include simple hand-picking, barriers, traps, vacuuming and tillage to disrupt breeding.
- Biological controls—Natural biological processes and materials can provide control, with acceptable environmental impact, and often at lower cost. The main approach is to promote beneficial insects that eat or parasitize target pests. Biological insecticides, derived from naturally occurring microorganisms (e.g.—Bt, entomopathogenic fungi and entomopathogenic nematodes), also fall in this category. Further 'biology-based' or 'ecological' techniques are under evaluation.
- Responsible use—Synthetic pesticides are used as required and often only at specific times in a pest's life cycle. Many newer pesticides are derived from plants or naturally occurring substances (e.g.—nicotine, pyrethrum and insect juvenile hormone analogues), but the toxophore or active component may be altered to provide increased biological activity or stability. Applications of pesticides must reach their intended targets. Matching the application technique to the crop, the pest, and the pesticide is critical. The use of low-volume spray equipment reduces overall pesticide use and labor cost.
An IPM regime can be simple or sophisticated. Historically, the main focus of IPM programmes was on agricultural insect pests.
Although originally developed for agricultural pest management, IPM
programmes are now developed to encompass diseases, weeds and other
pests that interfere with management objectives for sites such as
residential and commercial structures, lawn and turf areas, and home and community gardens.
Process
IPM is the selection and use of pest control actions that will ensure favourable economic, ecological and social consequences
and is applicable to most agricultural, public health and amenity pest
management situations. The IPM process starts with monitoring, which
includes inspection and identification, followed by the establishment of
economic injury levels. The economic injury levels set the economic
threshold level. That is the point when pest damage (and the benefits
of treating the pest) exceed the cost of treatment.
This can also be an action threshold level for determining an
unacceptable level that is not tied to economic injury. Action
thresholds are more common in structural pest management and economic
injury levels in classic agricultural pest management. An example of an
action threshold is one fly in a hospital operating room is not
acceptable, but one fly in a pet kennel would be acceptable. Once a
threshold has been crossed by the pest population action steps need to
be taken to reduce and control the pest. Integrated pest management
employs a variety of actions including cultural controls such as
physical barriers, biological controls such as adding and conserving
natural predators and enemies of the pest, and finally chemical controls
or pesticides. Reliance on knowledge, experience, observation and
integration of multiple techniques makes IPM appropriate for organic farming
(excluding synthetic pesticides). These may or may not include
materials listed on the Organic Materials Review Institute (OMRI) Although the pesticides and particularly insecticides used in organic farming and organic gardening
are generally safer than synthetic pesticides, they are not always more
safe or environmentally friendly than synthetic pesticides and can
cause harm. For conventional farms IPM can reduce human and environmental exposure to hazardous chemicals, and potentially lower overall costs.
Risk assessment usually includes four issues: 1) characterization
of biological control agents, 2) health risks, 3) environmental risks
and 4) efficacy.
Mistaken identification of a pest may result in ineffective
actions. E.g., plant damage due to over-watering could be mistaken for fungal infection, since many fungal and viral infections arise under moist conditions.
Monitoring begins immediately, before the pest's activity becomes
significant. Monitoring of agricultural pests includes tracking
soil/planting media fertility and water quality. Overall plant health
and resistance to pests is greatly influenced by pH, alkalinity,
of dissolved mineral and oxygen reduction potential. Many diseases are
waterborne, spread directly by irrigation water and indirectly by
splashing.
Once the pest is known, knowledge of its lifecycle provides the optimal intervention points. For example, weeds reproducing from last year's seed can be prevented with mulches and pre-emergent herbicide.
Pest-tolerant crops such as soybeans
may not warrant interventions unless the pests are numerous or rapidly
increasing. Intervention is warranted if the expected cost of damage by
the pest is more than the cost of control. Health hazards may require
intervention that is not warranted by economic considerations.
Specific sites may also have varying requirements. E.g., white clover may be acceptable on the sides of a tee box on a golf course, but unacceptable in the fairway where it could confuse the field of play.
Possible interventions include mechanical/physical, cultural,
biological and chemical. Mechanical/physical controls include picking
pests off plants, or using netting or other material to exclude pests
such as birds from grapes or rodents
from structures. Cultural controls include keeping an area free of
conducive conditions by removing waste or diseased plants, flooding,
sanding, and the use of disease-resistant crop varieties. Biological controls are numerous. They include: conservation of natural predators or augmentation of natural predators, sterile insect technique (SIT).
Augmentation, inoculative release and inundative release are
different methods of biological control that affect the target pest in
different ways. Augmentative control includes the periodic introduction
of predators. With inundative release, predators are collected, mass-reared and periodically released in large numbers into the pest area. This is used for an immediate reduction in host populations, generally for annual crops, but is not suitable for long run use.
With inoculative release a limited number of beneficial organisms are
introduced at the start of the growing season. This strategy offers long
term control as the organism's progeny affect pest populations
throughout the season and is common in orchards.
With seasonal inoculative release the beneficials are collected,
mass-reared and released seasonally to maintain the beneficial
population. This is commonly used in greenhouses.
In America and other western countries, inundative releases are
predominant, while Asia and the eastern Europe more commonly use
inoculation and occasional introductions.
The sterile insect technique (SIT) is an area-wide IPM program
that introduces sterile male pests into the pest population to trick
females into (unsuccessful) breeding encounters, providing a form of birth control and reducing reproduction rates.
The biological controls mentioned above only appropriate in extreme
cases, because in the introduction of new species, or supplementation of
naturally occurring species can have detrimental ecosystem effects.
Biological controls can be used to stop invasive species or pests, but
they can become an introduction path for new pests.
Chemical controls include horticultural oils or the application of insecticides and herbicides. A green pest management IPM program uses pesticides derived from plants, such as botanicals, or other naturally occurring materials.
Pesticides can be classified by their modes of action. Rotating
among materials with different modes of action minimizes pest
resistance.
Evaluation is the process of assessing whether the intervention
was effective, whether it produced unacceptable side effects, whether to
continue, revise or abandon the program.
Southeast Asia
The Green Revolution
of the 1960s and '70s introduced sturdier plants that could support the
heavier grain loads resulting from intensive fertilizer use. Pesticide
imports by 11 Southeast Asian
countries grew nearly sevenfold in value between 1990 and 2010,
according to FAO statistics, with disastrous results. Rice farmers
become accustomed to spraying soon after planting, triggered by signs of
the leaf folder moth, which appears early in the growing season. It
causes only superficial damage and doesn't reduce yields. In 1986,
Indonesia banned 57 pesticides and completely stopped subsidizing their
use. Progress was reversed in the 2000s, when growing production
capacity, particularly in China, reduced prices. Rice production in Asia
more than doubled. But it left farmers believing more is better—whether
it's seed, fertilizer, or pesticides.
The brown planthopper, Nilaparvata lugens,
the farmers' main target, has become increasingly resistant. Since
2008, outbreaks have devastated rice harvests throughout Asia, but not
in the Mekong Delta. Reduced spraying allowed natural predators to
neutralize planthoppers in Vietnam. In 2010 and 2011, massive
planthopper outbreaks hit 400,000 hectares of Thai rice fields, causing
losses of about $64 million. The Thai government is now pushing the "no
spray in the first 40 days" approach.
By contrast early spraying kills frogs, spiders, wasps and
dragonflies that prey on the later-arriving and dangerous planthopper
and produced resistant strains. Planthoppers now require pesticide doses
500 times greater than originally. Overuse indiscriminately kills
beneficial insects and decimates bird and amphibian populations.
Pesticides are suspected of harming human health and became a common
means for rural Asians to commit suicide.
In 2001, scientists challenged 950 Vietnamese farmers to try IPM.
In one plot, each farmer grew rice using their usual amounts of seed
and fertilizer, applying pesticide as they chose. In a nearby plot, less
seed and fertilizer were used and no pesticides were applied for 40
days after planting. Yields from the experimental plots was as good or
better and costs were lower, generating 8% to 10% more net income. The
experiment led to the "three reductions, three gains" campaign, claiming
that cutting the use of seed, fertilizer and pesticide would boost
yield, quality and income. Posters, leaflets, TV commercials and a 2004
radio soap opera that featured a rice farmer who gradually accepted the
changes. It didn't hurt that a 2006 planthopper outbreak hit farmers
using insecticides harder than those who didn't. Mekong Delta farmers cut insecticide spraying from five times per crop cycle to zero to one.
The Plant Protection Center and the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) have been encouraging farmers to grow flowers, okra and beans on rice paddy
banks, instead of stripping vegetation, as was typical. The plants
attract bees and a tiny wasp that eats planthopper eggs, while the
vegetables diversify farm incomes.
Agriculture companies offer bundles of pesticides with seeds and
fertilizer, with incentives for volume purchases. A proposed law in
Vietnam requires licensing pesticide dealers and government approval of
advertisements to prevent exaggerated claims. Insecticides that target
other pests, such as Scirpophaga incertulas (stem borer), the larvae of moth species that feed on rice plants allegedly yield gains of 21% with proper use.